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Iran 'close to nuclear weapons'

Moscow, July 13, 2010

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said that Iran was moving closer to having the potential to create nuclear weapons.

'Iran is moving closer to possessing the potential which in principle could be used for the creation of nuclear weapons,' Medvedev told a meeting of ambassadors in Moscow.

Meanwhile Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday said on US television that 'Irrational regimes' like Iran cannot be allowed to have nuclear arms and it is a mistake to think Tehran's ambitions can be contained.

Netanyahu, who met President Barack Obama last week during a visit to Washington and New York, told 'Fox News Sunday' that Iran was 'just moving on with its efforts' to develop nuclear weapons - a prospect he called 'very, very dangerous.'

Asked whether a nuclear Iran could be contained, he said: 'No, I don't. I think that's a mistake, and I think people fall into a misconception.'

'I don't think you can rely on Iran,' Netanyahu said in a taped interview. 'And we should not allow irrational regimes like Iran to have nuclear weapons. It's the ultimate terrorist threat today.'

Netanyahu declined to say whether he had any deadline for allowing diplomacy with Iran to run its course.

'We always reserve the right to defend ourselves,' he said, reiterating a core policy of Israel, which does not confirm or deny widely held beliefs that it has the only nuclear arsenal in the Middle East.

Iran says its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes only. But the US and its allies fear Tehran is pursuing an atomic weapons program and have pushed a series of United Nations and unilateral sanctions against Iran.

'There's only been one time that Iran actually stopped the program and that was when it feared US military action,' Netanyahu said.

'So when the president (Obama) says that he's determined to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons and that all options are on the table, I think that's the right statement of policy.'

Netanyahu did not directly answer a question about a nuclear weapons-free zone in the Middle East but accused Iran, Iraq and Libya of violating a non-proliferation pact.

'So I think we should stay focused on the real problem in the Middle East,' he said. 'It's not Israel. It's these dictatorships that are developing nuclear weapons with the specific goal of wiping Israel away,' he added-Reuters